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The great implosion
OVER RECENT YEARS, we have often been accused of
being ‘catastrophists’. This is because we predicted that the
debt-driven bubble economy, dominated by high-profit, high-risk finance
capitalism, would at a certain point collapse, resulting in a serious
downturn in the world economy. As a review of our articles will show
(see: a crisis foretold), we have never proclaimed a
‘catastrophe’ at every point, but have presented a careful, balanced
analysis of each stage of development. And our analysis is now being
amply borne out.
Unfortunately, some on the left succumbed to the
idea that the world capitalist boom, based on accelerated globalisation
and ultra-free-market policies, could continue indefinitely. The events
of recent weeks, following the collapse of the US housing bubble and the
severe repercussions of the subprime mortgage crisis, have completely
changed the picture. Now the headlines in the serious capitalist press
are ‘catastrophist’. "Capitalism in convulsion", read a headline in the
Financial Times (20 September).
George Bush’s attempted multi-billion dollar rescue
of the financial system, wrote John Plender, is "at the cost of
inflicting severe damage on the US model of free-market capitalism".
(Financial Times, 20 September) After the government-financed bail-outs
and takeovers of Bear Stearns, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, American
Insurance Group, etc, it has become commonplace to refer to the
‘socialisation’ or ‘nationalisation’ of financial institutions. In
reality, the colossal debts of reckless, predatory finance capitalism
are being offloaded onto the shoulders of the working class.
When US treasury secretary, Hank Paulson, announced
his $700bn Troubled Asset Rescue Programme, the commentator, Paul
Krugman (a liberal Democrat), quipped: "Comrade Paulson is taking over
the commanding heights". One financial trader, Bill Perkins, a free-marketeer,
placed an advert in the New York Times. It shows Bush, Paulson and
Federal Reserve chairman, Ben Bernanke, the ‘new communists’, raising an
American flag on the grave of ‘private enterprise’ and ‘capitalism’.
Perkins believes that failed banks should be allowed to collapse, and
not be bailed out at the taxpayers’ expense. "I think it’s a kind of
trickle down version of socialism or communism", he said. "You have the
government nationalising more institutions than Venezuela". (The
Guardian, 25 September)
For a few days, however, Bush, Paulson and Bernanke
were facing the prospect of a new 1929-type crash of the financial
system. If they allowed it to happen, as the Federal Reserve and the
government did in 1929, it would threaten the survival of the capitalist
system. From a capitalist standpoint, they had no choice but to
intervene to try to stabilise the financial system. Whether Paulson’s
package succeeds remains to be seen. There is a chain of crisis that is
far from played out.
Nevertheless, the accumulation of state-finance
bail-outs and de facto nationalisation, and now the $700bn rescue plan,
is a shattering blow to the prestige of US capitalism and the ideology
of the free market.
Nationalisation by the Bush regime, of course, does
not mean real ‘socialism’. Their aim is to use the state’s resources,
including a massive increase in public debt, to stabilise capitalism and
prepare the ground for a recovery at a later date. The bill for the
bail-outs will be handed to the working class, who contribute the
biggest share of taxes to the US government. Moreover, millions of
working-class families have been ensnared by crooked finance companies
into the subprime mortgage trap, and many are now losing their homes.
Millions will face unemployment and poverty wages as the financial
crisis pushes the US economy deeper into recession.
Real socialism would mean the taking over of the
finance sector and the commanding heights of the economy by a government
of the working class, to be run democratically under the control of
those who produce the wealth. Democratic planning would replace the
anarchy of the market. Production would be to meet the needs of society,
not the profits of the few. Nevertheless, as Karl Marx and Friedrich
Engels pointed out, even nationalisation measures carried out by the
capitalist state for its own ends demonstrate the redundancy of private
ownership and the possibility of an alternative, more advanced economic
system.
Domination of finance capital
MANY ARE NOW blaming the current crisis on the
‘greed’ and ‘fear’ of bankers, hedge fund managers, traders on financial
markets, and so on. These people have undoubtedly played a predatory,
parasitic role. Their speculative activities have concentrated wealth
and profits into the hands of a tiny, super-rich minority. Last year,
for instance, the average chief executive in the finance sector gained
an income 275 times that of an average worker. Their egotistical
motives, however, are a symptom of the system, not the cause of
developments.
Over the last 30 years, the capitalist class in the
US, Britain and elsewhere moved away from investing in productive
activity, the production of goods and services required by the majority
of people. They sought higher levels of profitability in the finance
sector, both in the advanced capitalist countries and in China and other
developing economies. The defeats of the working class in the 1980s,
followed by the collapse of Stalinism in the Soviet Union and Eastern
Europe, allowed the capitalist class to intensify the exploitation of
the working class, especially in the neo-colonial countries of the
underdeveloped world. The capitalist system as a whole became
increasingly parasitic.
That was the basis on which the parasitic finance
capitalism became dominant. It was allowed free scope by globalisation
and ultra-free-market (neo-liberal) policies. But the growth of
grotesque inequality, with the worldwide reduction in the share of
wealth taken by the working class, increasingly restricted the market
for capitalism. The capitalist class, especially those operating on the
Anglo-US model, have sustained relatively high levels of growth on the
basis of ever growing volumes of debt. In 1980, global debt was
approximately equal to global GDP. Since then, however, global debt has
ballooned to over 3.5 times global output. At the same time, finance
capitalism, the channel through which this debt is traded for profit,
took around a third of capitalist profits.
This trend, as we have pointed out many times, was
unsustainable. It was only a matter of time before the whole edifice
collapsed. That is what is happening now. The shadow banking system, the
network of unregulated investment banks, hedge funds, and the banks’ own
off-balance sheet vehicles, has imploded. The shadow network was
developed to bypass the regulated commercial banks. But the major banks,
which still form the core of the finance system, have not escaped the
crisis of liquidity and capital availability. Derivatives, a whole array
of exotic financial instruments that were supposed to spread if not
abolish risk, have indeed turned out to be "financial instruments of
mass destruction", as the old-fashioned financier, Warren Buffett,
warned.
There will be a profound reaction in the US and
internationally to the capitalist crisis and the state bail-out of
rotten finance capital. Apart from the economic contradictions, the
crisis will undoubtedly produce a monumental scandal of corrupt
practices, fraud and theft on an even bigger scale than the earlier
Enron scandals. Workers will be forced to organise and fight against the
effects of capitalist crisis. These events will create fertile ground
for the growth of interest in genuine socialism and Marxism.
Countdown to meltdown
EVENTS IN SEPTEMBER marked a new, critical stage of
the crisis in the global finance system. The world was brought to the
brink of a 1929-type collapse.
On 7 September, the US treasury was forced to step
in and take over the direct running of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the
two giant government-sponsored mortgage providers. This followed the
government intervention in July, when it guaranteed their $5 trillion
mortgage debt in return for shares in these institutions – in effect, a
partial nationalisation. Even that failed to stabilise these giants.
Paulson’s ‘bazooka’ had not proved enough to reassure foreign investors,
particularly Asian central banks, which have been selling off Fannie and
Freddie bonds. A complete takeover by the government, effectively
nationalising the institutions, was the only measure left.
Then (14-15 September) Lehman Brothers and Merrill
Lynch, two of the five giant Wall Street investment banks, faced
bankruptcy. Other Wall Street banks refused to intervene without a
government undertaking to guarantee Lehman and Merrill toxic assets.
Paulson and Bernanke refused. They had come under tremendous political
pressure to avoid handing out any more taxpayers’ dollars. Moreover,
free marketers were demanding that they avoid creating further ‘moral
hazard’, that is, sending out another signal that reckless speculators
would be protected from their own folly by the assurance of a government
bail-out. By refusing to back a government rescue, Paulson and Bernanke
hoped to send a message that there would be no more Bear Stearns-type
government-sponsored bail-outs for failing banks. Lehman Brothers filed
for bankruptcy, and Barclays International and other vultures began to
cherry-pick the potentially profitable Lehman assets. Merrill Lynch, on
the other hand, rushed to sell itself to the Bank of America, a deposit
bank with much greater capital reserves.
Paulson and Bernanke, however, made a monumental
miscalculation. They thought they could draw a line, but their refusal
to back a rescue of Lehman or Merrill triggered a general slump in bank
shares. This signalled that a whole swathe of banks were about to follow
Lehman and Merrill into the dust. Among the most threatened were the two
remaining investment banks, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs. The whole
‘shadow banking system’, the unregulated, debt-financed, highly
speculative network of investment banks and hedge funds, was imploding.
Because of their multiple links with the major banks, which also
operated off-balance sheet investment vehicles, the investment banks
threatened to bring down many other institutions. If Paulson and
Bernanke had backed a rescue of Lehman and Merrill, it would not have
stopped the rot (as the subsequent bankruptcy of Washington Mutual
shows), but by standing back as Lehman and Merrill sank, they
accelerated the pace of the banking crisis.
The failure of Lehman and Merrill had an immediate
knock-on effect on the short-term money market. Money market funds, used
by the banks to finance their short-term borrowing, have usually been
regarded as almost as safe as cash. A key aspect of the credit crunch
was the seizing up of this short-term money market, as banks hoarded
cash and avoided making any potentially risky loans to other banks.
Despite the Federal Reserve’s drastic interest rates cuts, the
inter-bank lending rate, usually fractionally higher than the Fed’s
rate, has soared to an unprecedented level. Reeling under the impact of
the Lehman and Merrill bankruptcies, the severe credit crunch turned
into a complete paralysis of this vital money market.
The Federal Reserve, cooperating with other major
central banks, was forced to pump $180bn into the global banking system
(on this occasion, currency swaps, dollars for euros, pounds, etc). In
the following few days, they pumped in another $100bn, and the central
banks of Britain and Japan, and the European Central Bank, also pumped
in additional liquidity. Moreover, the Fed and other central banks
agreed to accept a wider range of securities as collateral for the
loans, including shares, company bonds, etc, in other words, much more
risky assets than the government bonds they had previously insisted on.
(Since then, more liquidity in the form of short-term loans have been
pumped in by central banks.)
Paulson had allowed Lehman and Merrill to collapse,
but faced with the possible collapse of a giant insurance company,
American Insurance Group (AIG), the government was forced to step in.
The AIG crisis was triggered by the downgrading of its security status
by a rating agency. This threatened to trigger a run on AIG’s shares,
thus further depleting its capital reserves. The problem was not with
AIG’s massive insurance business in the US, Europe and Asia. The crisis
arose from its involvement in the shadow banking system through its
worldwide business in credit default swaps, a form of insurance used to
guarantee the investment grade status of a wide range of securities
(mortgage-backed securities, company bonds, municipal bonds, etc). AIG
had issued $447bn of such insurance (including $300bn to European
institutions).
The downgrading of AIG’s credit status automatically
meant a downgrading of securities insured by AIG-issued credit default
swaps. This would, in turn, create problems for any finance house using
AIG-insured securities as collateral for their own borrowing. In other
words, a collapse of AIG would mean a huge increase in the quantity of
toxic debt in the global finance system. The losses would be absolutely
staggering (one estimate is that it would mean at least $180bn for the
global financial sector). At the same time, AIG’s collapse would also
mean the collapse of its worldwide insurance business. To avoid a
catastrophic crash, Paulson was forced to step in by guaranteeing $85bn
of AIG assets in return for preference shares in the insurance company.
During the critical week, 15-19 September, world
stock exchanges plunged. The government bail-out of AIG failed to
stabilise share markets. At the same time, the price of oil, which had
been tending to fall over recent weeks, began to rise – probably due to
a panicky buying of oil futures. Paulson and Bernanke evidently realised
that they were faced with a stark 1929 situation. If they stood aside,
there would undoubtedly be a collapse of the global finance system
which, in turn, would provoke a major slump in the world capitalist
economy. Having learned the lessons of the 1929 crash, when the Federal
Reserve and the US government stood aside and allowed the financial
dominoes to collapse, Paulson and Bernanke decided that they had no
choice but to step in to save the capitalist system.
On 19 September, Paulson announced his Troubled
Asset Relief Programme (TARP), a $700bn ‘plan’ to place a floor under
collapsing financial institutions and re-stabilise the US and world
banking system. Paulson’s announcement averted a global crash, at least
for the time being. But it is really a palliative measure that will not
in itself overcome the credit crunch and the paralysis of the banking
system.
Paulson’s package
AFTER THE CRISIS with Lehman Brothers and Merrill
Lynch, and the seizing up of the short-term money market (despite
continuing, massive injections of liquidity by the Federal Reserve and
other central banks) Paulson was forced to announce (18 September) a
rescue package, the TARP. Without giving any details, Paulson proposed
to spend $700bn of taxpayers’ money to establish a toxic waste dump for
the unsellable securities still on the books of financial institutions.
A reported $500bn of losses have already been
written off, but some estimates put remaining securities from the
housing market at a further $1,000bn. Global stock exchanges immediately
revived following Paulson’s announcement. Almost immediately, however,
congressional leaders, both Democrat and Republican, began to protest at
the sweeping character of Paulson’s rescue plan and the extraordinary
powers that he was claiming as treasury secretary.
Paulson proposed that the treasury secretary should
be given (initially for two years) unlimited powers to buy securities
from anyone at any price according to his discretion. Moreover, he was
claiming immunity from any kind of action by courts or administrative
agencies of the government. Initially, he proposed buying the securities
from US banks only, but soon widened this to include the US subsidiaries
of foreign banks.
If this were accepted by Congress, Paulson would be
the most powerful treasury secretary in US history. On its cover,
Newsweek dubbed him ‘King Henry’. In effect, the treasury secretary
would become the economic executive of US capitalism, with no oversight
(merely reporting to Congress twice a year), a rival source of power to
the presidency itself.
Like Bush after 9/11, Paulson, backed by Bernanke,
is attempting to use the threat of global financial collapse to get
rapid congressional approval of his proposals without a thorough
discussion of their content. Paulson, for instance, is demanding the
package should be ‘clean’, meaning that it should not be encumbered by
any proposals such as the government acquisition of shares in exchange
for buying toxic debt, or limits on the remuneration of bankers, or
relief to homeowners facing foreclosure. Keen to bail out bankrupt
bankers, Paulson brutally rejects the legitimate claims of home-buyers.
Paulson is proposing to pay something near the face
value of toxic securities, over 60 cents in the dollar, as opposed to
their current market value of 20 or 30 cents. Moreover, a variety of
banks, finance houses and other companies are lobbying to widen the
scope of the rescue. For instance, there are demands for municipal
bonds, credit card debt and car-purchase debt to be included. Wall
Street firms are already looking forward to the fees they hope to
collect from being drawn in to administer the operation of Paulson’s
programme.
It is hardly surprising, then, that the heads of
finance companies are enthusiastic about Paulson’s proposals. However,
some free-market Republicans have vehemently denounced the plan as the
‘socialisation of debt’. Senator Jim Bunning, a Republican from
Kentucky, proclaimed: "The free market for all intents and purposes is
dead in America". He said that Paulson’s plan would "take Wall Street’s
pain and spread it to the taxpayers… It’s financial socialism, and it’s
un-American".
Democrat leaders, on the other hand, are demanding
measures to help distressed homeowners. Paulson has rejected this demand
on the grounds that the bundles of toxic securities are too complex to
allow the reduction of individual homeowners’ payments. "The banking and
securities industries… are fighting the change with all their might, as
they did when it came up with the housing bill that was adopted in
July". (International Herald Tribune, 24 September)
Paulson’s current proposal is completely different
from the measure used to rescue the savings and loans banks (thrifts) in
the early 1990s. At that time, the US government effectively
nationalised the failing thrifts, and sold off their remaining assets
over a period, before returning the thrifts to private ownership. The
robust growth of the economy after 1994 restored the value of mortgaged
property and allowed the government to recover part of the cost of the
rescue.
A similar measure was taken by the Swedish
government after the collapse of the housing bubble in 1991-92. The
government nationalised a large section of the Swedish banking sector,
cutting out the shareholders of these failed institutions and,
subsequently, any sellable assets were sold off and the banks were later
returned to the private sector. The rescue, however, cost about 4% of
Sweden’s gross domestic product (although some of this was recovered
over time). The US capitalist class, however, would undoubtedly strongly
resist full-scale nationalisation of the US banking sector.
The current Paulson rescue proposal, costing around
$700bn, is the equivalent of about 5% of GDP. However, Paulson has no
intention of taking over the failed US banks, merely bailing them out by
buying up their toxic debts, thus allowing them to replenish their
capital and carry on as usual. Paulson is not even demanding shares in
the banks in return for buying their bad debt.
Will Paulson get congressional approval for his
package? Given the strength of congressional opposition, there is likely
to be some delay, and Paulson may be forced to accept some
modifications, particularly to the extraordinary, unchecked powers he is
claiming. However, faced with the threat of further falls in financial
markets and the possibility of new convulsions, it seems likely that
Congress will accept the package in one form or another before
dispersing for the November elections.
A socialist alternative
PAULSON CLAIMS THAT people do not care who owns the
banks. Millions of homeowners, however, will care that the government is
using taxpayers’ money to bail out the banks which have sold and
securitised toxic mortgages while millions are facing penal interest
rates and the threat of foreclosure. In fact, millions of Americans are
already incensed at Paulson’s plan.
Community organisations, unions, and all those who
defend the interests of working people should demand that, instead of
the nationalisation of finance capital’s toxic assets and bad debts, the
banks and financial institutions (insurance companies, hedge funds, etc)
should be nationalised and run in a democratically planned way under
workers’ control and management. Compensation for small shareholders and
depositors should be on the basis of need only.
The banking sector should be run to promote the
interests of industries providing goods and services needed by the
majority of the population, not funding the speculative activities of a
hyper-rich minority of financiers. The banks should provide cheap
mortgages for personal home buyers (with a ceiling to exclude luxury
houses for the wealthy). They should also provide cheap credit to small
businesses and small farmers serving the needs of local communities.
Such measures, of course, would for many raise the
question of ownership and control of wider sectors of the economy, and
the need for democratic planning to replace the anarchy of the market
and the naked pursuit of personal profit. The US government, for
instance, is currently considering a package of state-guaranteed loans
to the big auto companies, Ford, Chrysler and GM. These corporations are
in deep crisis and should also be taken over and run under democratic
workers’ control and management to meet the needs of society.
Unions and community groups should totally oppose
all foreclosures. Where dodgy mortgages have been sold through fraud or
deception, they should be cancelled. Home buyers who cannot meet their
mortgage repayments should have the right to rent the property at an
affordable, social rent. Where, through foreclosures and the bankruptcy
of builders and property companies, there are empty houses, state and
municipal government should take over unoccupied homes and rent them out
at affordable rents. Decisions regarding mortgage defaults,
foreclosures, and home owners’ rights in general, should be taken not by
government officials or bankruptcy courts, but by popular, elected
committees which will safeguard the rights of working people.
A new period
IF PASSED BY Congress, probably with some
modifications, Paulson’s package may avert a financial crash. There will
still be serious wrangles over the detailed measures to be implemented.
However, the rescue plan will not in itself revive the finance sector.
The US housing crisis, the root of the credit crunch, is far from over.
Huge losses in the financial sector mean that the credit crunch will
continue for years, even if the toxic waste is taken over by the
government.
The rescue of the finance sector will not avert a
recession in the US economy, which is already gathering pace. Moreover,
the US slowdown, combined with financial crisis in many other economies,
is pushing the world towards an economic downturn. There is now a sharp
recession in the European economies. Japan, after a weak recovery in
recent years, has once again lapsed into zero growth. China, still seen
as a dynamo of the world economy, is expected to slow down from 11-12%
growth to around 8% during 2008. Though 8% is relatively high, this
would have serious effects within China, economically and politically.
The underlying crisis of capitalist production and
profitability has been postponed several times since the 1980s through a
series of financial bubbles that have fuelled debt-based consumer
spending in the US and elsewhere (driving the production of cheap goods
in China and other low-cost economies). But now is the time of
reckoning. The collapse of the extreme debt mountain almost certainly
means a prolonged period of weak growth in the world capitalist economy.
Undoubtedly, there will still be an economic cycle, but it is not likely
that there will be a return to the kind of global boom that was
experienced between 2001-07.
The recent phase of accelerated globalisation and
unfettered neo-liberal policies is drawing to a close and an entirely
new period is opening. Massive state intervention in the finance sector
has wider implications for trade, international currency flows and
industrial policy. There will be even deeper tensions between the major
capitalist powers. Prolonged stagnation, punctuated by weak recoveries
and renewed recession, will provoke social crisis and mighty political
struggles. The economic crisis of capitalism is also an ideological and
political crisis, and this unavoidably places Marxism back on the
political agenda.
A crisis foretold
Socialism Today’s analysis of the capitalist
system and coverage of today’s unfolding crisis.
Socialism Today No.105, November 2006
Since the early 1980s, world capitalism has followed a trajectory
based on globalisation and neo-liberal policies. In this feature
article we reviewed Capitalism Unleashed, a book by the socialist
economist Andrew Glyn, which analysed this turn to fundamentalist
free-market policies and examined its impact on economic growth and
stability, and on the distribution of wealth between the super-rich
and the working class.
Socialism Today No.106, December 2006-January 2007
The deepening recession in the housing market had cancelled out any
positive effects from the fall in energy prices, we argued in this
update article. Consumer spending was still the mainspring of US
growth, but working families were more dependent than ever on debt.
Socialism Today No.109, May 2007
The world capitalist economy had been buoyed up by a tide of
liquidity, a flood of cheap credit, we argued in this major feature
article. This had fuelled the frenzied financial speculation of the
last few years, a profits bonanza for the super-rich. Underlying this,
however, were the unsustainable imbalances and deepening
contradictions in world economic relations.
Socialism Today No.112, October 2007
The global capitalist economy is hit by a major credit crunch. The
collapse of the subprime mortgage business in the US, brought home by
the collapse of two hedge funds managed by Bear Stearns investment
bank, provoked panic on money markets. The effects had already spread
much wider than the housing finance sector, paralysing interbank
lending and seizing up big sections of the wholesale money market.
Socialism Today No.112, October 2007
Early in September 2007, the impending insolvency of Northern Rock
provoked a classic bank run, with thousands of depositors queuing to
withdraw their money. The problems of this relatively minor bank
threatened to detonate a major financial crisis, and highlighted the
fragility of globalised financial markets.
Socialism Today No.115, February 2008
Global capitalism is facing its worst crisis since 1945, we argued in
this feature article. The collapse of the US housing bubble had
triggered an economic slowdown and the subprime finance crisis. These
forces threatened a global financial crisis and a serious downturn in
the world economy.
Socialism Today No.116, March 2008
The economic slowdown in the US gathered momentum, accompanied by
slower growth in Europe and elsewhere. At the same time, the credit
crunch was intensifying and spreading to wider sections of the
economy.
Socialism Today No.116, March 2008
After months of twisting and turning, desperately trying to avoid
dreaded nationalisation, Britain’s government was forced to announce
the ‘temporary nationalisation’ of Northern Rock. An update article
looked at the significance of this move.
Socialism Today No.117, April 2008
The failure of the investment bank Bear Stearns marked a new stage of
the banking crisis, we argued, as the liquidity-solvency spiral
continued its downward course. At the same time, the Fed-financed
bailout, together with calls for a wider state rescue of failing
banks, opened up an ideological crisis for ultra-free-market
capitalism.
Socialism Today No.119, June 2008
The capitalist economy, especially in the US and Britain, more and
more resembles a casino. The financial sector now accounts for around
50% of corporate profits. The shadow banking sector, composed of
unregulated hedge funds and investment banks, accounts for over half
of all credit, while retail banks are more and more embroiled in
speculative activity through their unregulated, ‘off balance-sheet’
activity. A review of The Trillion Dollar Meltdown, by Charles Morris.
Socialism Today No.120, July-August 2008
‘They don’t like us but they want our money’, says the head of
Norway’s sovereign wealth fund. Cap in hand, cash-strapped US and
European banks have been pleading for capital infusions.
State-sponsored sovereign wealth funds have recently invested $60
billion in shaky banks, as well as buying property and taking over
companies. This has provoked an anguished debate among big-business
strategists: are sovereign wealth funds indispensable saviours or a
threat to western civilisation?
Back issues of Socialism Today are
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London, E11 1YD (cheques payable to Socialism Today).
A comprehensive subject index of
the first 100 editions of Socialism Today is also available, at £2-50.
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